Euthenics, There Has Not Been As Comprehensive an Analysis of the Direct Connections Between Domestic Science and Eugenics

Euthenics, There Has Not Been As Comprehensive an Analysis of the Direct Connections Between Domestic Science and Eugenics

University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 2011 Eugenothenics: The Literary Connection Between Domesticity and Eugenics Caleb J. true University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses Part of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Commons, United States History Commons, Women's History Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons true, Caleb J., "Eugenothenics: The Literary Connection Between Domesticity and Eugenics" (2011). Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014. 730. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/730 This thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EUGENOTHENICS: THE LITERARY CONNECTION BETWEEN DOMESTICITY AND EUGENICS A Thesis Presented by CALEB J. TRUE Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS September 2011 History © Copyright by Caleb J. True 2011 All Rights Reserved EUGENOTHENICS: THE LITERARY CONNECTION BETWEEN DOMESTICITY AND EUGENICS A Thesis Presented By Caleb J. True Approved as to style and content by: _______________________________ Laura L. Lovett, Chair _______________________________ Larry Owens, Member _______________________________ Kathy J. Cooke, Member ________________________________ Joye Bowman, Chair, History Department DEDICATION To Kristina. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and foremost, I would like to thank my advisor, Laura L. Lovett, for being a staunch supporter of my project, a wonderful mentor and a source of inspiration and encouragement throughout my time in the M.A. History program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. I would also like to thank Kathy J. Cooke, whose work I happened upon in the early stages of this project; whose work became quickly crucial to the conceptualization of my thesis; and who, wonderfully, agreed to serve on my committee and provide detailed and constructive suggestions for improvement of my work. I would like to thank Larry Owens, the third member of my committee, for his insight and helpful comments on my project, but also for his time and patience as my interests and direction fluctuated semester to semester. For reading drafts of this project, I’d like to thank Laura Lovett (again) and the members of the History 791B research seminar who provided crucial commentary and criticism on early versions of this project, letting me know what was working really well, what I should drop, where I was “on.” Finally, I would like to thank my parents, my significant other, Kristina, and everyone else who gently encouraged me to keep up the good work, and see it through to completion. And a big thank you is owed to the members of 25 Elizabeth House—Paul, Ben, Claire, Chris, and Eric—for helping me out during my final semester at Umass Amherst. For general support and other exciting reasons, Eliza Ahrens, Morgan Hubbard, Gabriel Kahsay, Chris Messier, and Paul Bergmann deserve a serious mention. v ABSTRACT EUGENOTHENICS: THE LITERARY CONNECTION BETWEEN DOMESTICITY AND EUGENICS SEPTEMBER 2011 CALEB J. TRUE, B.A. UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI ST. LOUIS M.A. UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST Directed by Laura L. Lovett This is an analysis of the connection between the domestic science movement and the eugenics movement. While it is made clear by historians such as Megan Elias and Kathy Cooke that there is ample connection between eugenics and euthenics, there has not been as comprehensive an analysis of the direct connections between domestic science and eugenics. Close examination of literature from the domestic science movement reveals the shared goals of domestic science and eugenics. The domestic science movement was also a necessary precursor to the euthenics movement, not simply a “re-envisioning” of home economics by Ellen Richards. When Richards died, her euthenic ideals would continue to be a part of domestic science in the early decades of the twentieth century. This analysis will contribute in part to the understanding of how, through rhetoric, nations can progress towards more unsightly policies of social engineering from seemingly benign beginnings. Eugenics may not have origins in domestic science, a field of homemaking, cookery, etiquette, and child-rearing, but eugenics certainly shares goals, purposes, and a vision with domestic science. vi TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.................................................................................................v ABSTRACT....................................................................................................................... vi CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................1 II. A SHORT HISTORY OF “NATURE”...........................................................................7 III. DOMESTIC SCIENCE: A SHORT HISTORY OF “NURTURE” ............................13 IV. LITERATURE AND THE MATURATION OF THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE MOVEMENT ..............................................................................................................26 V. EUTHENICS: PROGRESS AND COMPROMISE.....................................................37 VI. AFTER RICHARDS: EUTHENIC PROLIFERATION AND PROFESSIONALIZATION........................................................................................43 VII. INTERLUDE: FOOD, EUGENICS, AND WORLD WAR I....................................63 VIII. THE AMERICAN RACE: FOOD AND “PURITY” ...............................................69 IX. CONCLUSION: “THE INSIDIOUS MAINSTREAM AGENDA” ...........................78 BIBLIOGRAPHY..............................................................................................................88 vii CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Euthenics began nominally when Ellen H. Richards (1842-1911) coined the term in her 1905 text The Cost of Shelter. She explained it fully in her 1910 text Euthenics: The Science of Controllable Environment . In the former text, Richards defines euthenics as “the science of better living.” In the latter text, her definition is “the betterment of living conditions, through conscious endeavor, for the purpose of securing efficient human beings.” 1 This progression of definitions shows how her ideas solidified and expanded in the five years between publications. Richards’s simple concept about “good living” entailed grander notions for family, society, and country. The purpose of “securing efficient human beings” is no petty task for the homemaker. Such a charge has grand nationalistic implications. Just as the definition of Euthenics changed in a scant five years, the meaning of domestic science transformed, until it, too, was recognized as having grand nationalistic implications. At what point around the turn of the century did the home, the kitchen, the nursery join the frontlines in the quest for an efficient, competitive American race? 2 1 Ellen H. Richards. The Cost of Shelter (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1905): 12, and Ellen H. Richards. Euthenics: The Science of Controllable Environment . (Boston: Whitcomb & Barrows, 1910): vii-viii 2 For authoritative material on euthenics, the works of Ellen H. Richards are key. Richards defined euthenics, coined the term, and discussed extensively its purposes. There are also a number of old articles on euthenics, some of which deserve treatment as both primary and secondary sources. While, for example, Ellen H. Richards’s Euthenics: The Science of Controllable Environment , is certainly a primary source where the question of understanding euthenics is concerned, Carl E. Seashore’s The Term “Euthenics ,” written much later in 1941 is primary only in that it is one academic’s interpretation and opinions on the subject; it is also an opinion formulated from a definite historical distance albeit one still far nearer the event in time that we happen to be. 1 In this essay I will explore eugenics, the domestic science movement, and euthenics. Euthenics was the last of these three movements named. It was so named in order that it was identifiable with eugenics; domestic science, beginning earlier in the nineteenth century, was not as seemingly closely related. By tracing the development of eugenics alongside the domestic science movement in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, I will show how domestic science and eugenics are closely related; the two movements share similar goals and use similar rhetoric to promote those goals. I will attempt to show that the evolution of race hygiene theorizing at the same time as the institutionalization of domestic science education was, if not more than a coincidence, a startling historical concurrence. Euthenics is, in a way, a convergence of both domestic science and eugenics, but it is also a compromise between the two movements. On the one hand, it is the acknowledgment—by a member of the scientific community, rather than a founding educational force like Catharine Beecher (1800-1878)—of a woman’s influence and power over the health of the American nation through her prescribed role as housewife and homemaker. That role is illustrated, refined, and championed by the domestic science movement. On the other hand, the creation of euthenics speaks to

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